26th USSR Championship, Tbilisi, Feb 1959. Runner-up Mikhail Tal receives his award from Georgian communist party official Zinaida Kvachadze. In the background are Petrosian (the winner of the event), Keres, Kholmov, Vasiukov...
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Winners of the 1982 Womens' Chess Olympiad in Lucerne- the USSR. Left to right: Maia Chiburdanidze, Nana Alexandria, Nona Gaprindashvili, Nana Ioselani - all from the Georgian SSR.
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James Tarjan took a 30 year break from chess. In 1984 he gave it up to become a librarian. He returned in 2014 & defeated Kramnik in 2017.
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🔸 Kiril Georgiev
🔸BulgarianChess Grandmaster
♦️ Kiril Dimitrov Georgiev is a Bulgarian chess grandmaster and six-time national champion. Kiril Georgiev first caught the eye of the chess world in 1983, when he became the World Junior Champion with an unusually strong score of 11½ out of 13.
▪️ Country: Bulgaria
▪️ Born: 28 November 1965 (age 52)
Petrich, Bulgaria
▪️ Title: Grandmaster
▪️ FIDE rating: 2596 (March 2018)
▪️ Peak rating: 2695 (July 2001)
♦️Kiril Dimitrov Georgiev was born in Petrich. He was awarded the IM title in 1983 and the GM title in 1985.
Georgiev has participated in every Olympiad from 1984 to 2012, usually on board 1 or 2. Apart from the 2002 Olympiad, where he was top board for Macedonia, he has played for Bulgaria.
He has also participated in all the biennial European Team Championships since 1983, barring 1997, 2001 and 2009, winning two individual bronze medals (in 1983 and 2003) and one individual gold medal (in 1999 when Bulgaria came 4th, its best result in the 3 decades since 1983.
♦️ In 2009, Georgiev broke Zsuzsa Polgar 's 4 year old world record for the most simultaneous chess games played: 360 games in just over 14 hours with a +280 =74 -6 (88%) result. However, that record lasted only a few months before it was broken in turn by Morteza Mahjoob from Iran.
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🔸BulgarianChess Grandmaster
♦️ Kiril Dimitrov Georgiev is a Bulgarian chess grandmaster and six-time national champion. Kiril Georgiev first caught the eye of the chess world in 1983, when he became the World Junior Champion with an unusually strong score of 11½ out of 13.
▪️ Country: Bulgaria
▪️ Born: 28 November 1965 (age 52)
Petrich, Bulgaria
▪️ Title: Grandmaster
▪️ FIDE rating: 2596 (March 2018)
▪️ Peak rating: 2695 (July 2001)
♦️Kiril Dimitrov Georgiev was born in Petrich. He was awarded the IM title in 1983 and the GM title in 1985.
Georgiev has participated in every Olympiad from 1984 to 2012, usually on board 1 or 2. Apart from the 2002 Olympiad, where he was top board for Macedonia, he has played for Bulgaria.
He has also participated in all the biennial European Team Championships since 1983, barring 1997, 2001 and 2009, winning two individual bronze medals (in 1983 and 2003) and one individual gold medal (in 1999 when Bulgaria came 4th, its best result in the 3 decades since 1983.
♦️ In 2009, Georgiev broke Zsuzsa Polgar 's 4 year old world record for the most simultaneous chess games played: 360 games in just over 14 hours with a +280 =74 -6 (88%) result. However, that record lasted only a few months before it was broken in turn by Morteza Mahjoob from Iran.
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♦️ A memorable game by Georgiev against Alexey Shirov☝️
The position after:
22 ... Rh6?
White to move and win!!
👇🏼👇🏼👇🏼
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The position after:
22 ... Rh6?
White to move and win!!
👇🏼👇🏼👇🏼
@unitychess
♦️ A memorable game by Georgiev against Alexey Shirov👇🏼
🔹 Kiril Dimitrov Georgiev vs Alexey Shirov
🔹 Biel 55/189 (Georgiev,Ki) (1992), Biel SUI, rd 12
🔹 Sicilian Defense: Four Knights Variation (B45)
♦️ Review this game and download PGN file👇🏼👇🏼
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🔹 Kiril Dimitrov Georgiev vs Alexey Shirov
🔹 Biel 55/189 (Georgiev,Ki) (1992), Biel SUI, rd 12
🔹 Sicilian Defense: Four Knights Variation (B45)
♦️ Review this game and download PGN file👇🏼👇🏼
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📘 13.N×d5!?
An interesting idea that has already been played twice.
13...N×d4 14.N×e7+ Q×e7 15.Qc4 B×g2 16.Q×d4 Rfd8 17.Qf4 Bb7 18.Bb4 Qe8 19.Rc7 Nd5 20.Q×f7+ Q×f7 21.R×f7 Ba6 22.Ba3 B×e2 23.Rc1=
With a more comfortable game for White.
An interesting idea that has already been played twice.
13...N×d4 14.N×e7+ Q×e7 15.Qc4 B×g2 16.Q×d4 Rfd8 17.Qf4 Bb7 18.Bb4 Qe8 19.Rc7 Nd5 20.Q×f7+ Q×f7 21.R×f7 Ba6 22.Ba3 B×e2 23.Rc1=
With a more comfortable game for White.
📘 66.Re5?
The leader of the tournament, Caruana missed an opportunity.
(66.Nf8+ Kg8 67.h6
A)67...K×f8 68.h7 N×e6+ 69.Kg4 +-
B)67...Re7 68.R×g7+ R×g7 69.B×g7 +-
66...Be8 67.e7 =
The leader of the tournament, Caruana missed an opportunity.
(66.Nf8+ Kg8 67.h6
A)67...K×f8 68.h7 N×e6+ 69.Kg4 +-
B)67...Re7 68.R×g7+ R×g7 69.B×g7 +-
66...Be8 67.e7 =
📘 9.h4
A novelty by Karjakin.The main line is 9.Bc4, which also supports the d4-d5 push.
9...c×d4 10.c×d4 Nc6 11.h5
A novelty by Karjakin.The main line is 9.Bc4, which also supports the d4-d5 push.
9...c×d4 10.c×d4 Nc6 11.h5